The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 508 contributions

Speeches by Norris.

Every Hansard contribution by Alex Norris this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 121140 of 508 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
19 Nov 2025 Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill

That is always the challenge, because we live in a world of misinformation, disinformation and, I am sad to say, occasionally bad faith. However, my antidote to that is the same as my hon. Friend’s: better transparency is the best way to see our way through. He is exactly right that we already publish a vast amount, in

immigration
164
19 Nov 2025 Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill

As I said in my opening speech, it is right that we take our time to develop the right package of data, so that we can publish it and the hon. Member for Hamble Valley (Paul Holmes) and I can sit down and discuss it in great detail. [Interruption.] As always, the hon. Member for Hamble Valley wants it now, but as I sus

immigration
89
19 Nov 2025 Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill

I am very grateful to the hon. Lady for her question. She may have heard me say before that it is not in the interests of anyone, anywhere in the UK, for the work of establishing order and control at the United Kingdom’s southern border to create displacement challenges with regard to the common travel area. That is so

immigration
170
19 Nov 2025 Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill

It is getting to the point where I might not be able to help the Opposition spokesperson, because I have answered the question. It is in nobody’s interest, as I say, for important information to not be available. We are preparing it as a whole dataset. I said that in opening, and I have said it in response to him at le

immigration
178
17 Nov 2025Immigration Removal Centre Contracts

I totally agree. The original sin in respect of what we are dealing with today—hotel use across the country and our pivot to military sites—was the choice of the previous Government to simply stop assessing applications. We are of course reversing that, but it is taking time to turn around their failure.

immigration
52
17 Nov 2025Immigration Removal Centre Contracts

“Real need” is a very important phrase. The reality is that over this Government’s time in office, we have deported over 50,000 people who have no right to be here—the best period of time in 10 years in this regard. We do need that detention capacity. Things are moving at Campsfield, so perhaps I should meet the hon. G

immigration
69
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

I am grateful for that clarification, Mr Speaker. We are totally clear that those who commit crimes should not get settlement or citizenship in this country; they should be removed. That is why removals have reached their highest level for a decade. We can do much more in this space, which is why the Home Secretary wil

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
67
17 Nov 2025Immigration Removal Centre Contracts

The Home Office has a procurement policy of competition by default, actively engaging with suppliers via the Government “find a tender” service to generate interest and promote competition for immigration removal centre contracts. Bids are evaluated on both technical and price aspects to ensure the contracts we sign ar

immigration
54
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

I am sad that the hon. Gentleman has a different characterisation of those who seek refuge in this country than the one I have from my own community —that is not my experience. We are clear that if individuals commit crime, there must be consequences, including their removal from this country. As I have said, the hon.

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
80
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

I am slightly reluctant to enter into the Brexit theory of everything with the hon. Gentleman. The reality is that we have the settlement we have. The British people rightly want to understand why asylum numbers are falling across Europe but increasing in the UK, and that is why we are taking the actions we propose to

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
70
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

All local authorities get an extra payment of £1,200 when someone in the supported estate ends up in their local authority, so I cannot quite understand that characterisation. If I have understood wrongly, I would be keen to meet the hon. Gentleman to understand his point, because we appreciate that there is an impact

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
83
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

In so many ways, the hon. Gentleman is ahead of his time—I may well be the first person to accuse him of that. He will have the opportunity to hear from the Home Secretary about our plans regarding visa sanctions; he just has to wait a little bit longer.

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
49
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

The Minister for Policing and Crime recently met a delegation of Sikh colleagues to discuss that very important case. As for the hon. Gentleman’s broader point about Denmark, it is right that, given the challenges we face in this country, our policies seek to draw on best practice from around Europe and the world, and

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
69
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

The hon. Gentleman and I have had this conversation about Stanwell before, and he has pressed the matter with characteristic vigour. I can say to him and his community that we have committed to closing these hotels in this Parliament; they will not be open for a day longer than they have to be. When we close hotels, th

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
82
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

That is not the position. We in the Government are resolute in our attempts to tackle illegal working, which does indeed act as a pull factor. The Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, which will return to this House from the Lords on Wednesday, has important provisions for dealing with the loopholes in the gig

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
93
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

I will have to follow up in writing with the specific percentages for the right hon. Gentleman, but I assure him and the House that we are doing full biometric checks at the front door. We are checking against European databases, as well as our own databases, to make sure that we know who is here and, if there is any o

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
67
29 Oct 2025 Asylum Seekers: MOD Housing

I am grateful for that question, and I would start by acknowledging the hon. Gentleman’s Herculean work throughout my time in Parliament, and before, regarding Christians persecuted abroad, so that people do not have to leave their homes. That is important work, and that opinion is shared across this place. I want to b

immigrationhousingdefence
110
29 Oct 2025 Asylum Seekers: MOD Housing

The reality is that the unit cost per night is broadly similar. The point is that we have to reduce the number of people in that accommodation. That is how we get value for the taxpayer and how we will not need the accommodations at all.

immigrationhousingdefence
46
29 Oct 2025 Asylum Seekers: MOD Housing

I would start by saying that I share the hon. Lady’s spirit on that, and I believe that the British public do too. Whether it is regarding Syrian refugees, Homes for Ukraine, the Afghan resettlement scheme, or British nationals overseas, the British public meet the moment when people need shelter, and show extraordinar

immigrationhousingdefence
136
29 Oct 2025 Asylum Seekers: MOD Housing

I can say to the hon. Gentleman that returns are up by more than 10% under this Government. I think the British public care about that. I make no apology for doing that in the quickest, cheapest and most expeditious way, which is what we pursue in many cases. The hon. Gentleman makes an important point about Hadush Keb

immigrationhousingdefence
191
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.